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The 2025 Freelance Fellowship Recipients

Tax breaks prove costly for Detroit

By hdcoadmin | April 14, 2006

David Josar of The Detroit News used State Tax Commission data, property assessments and tax records to show that Detroit is losing more than $63 million in annual revenue because of property tax breaks given to people moving into new houses, condos and lofts. The tax breaks have cost the city and school district more…

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Sonics’ owners are a secretive team

By hdcoadmin | April 14, 2006

Jim Brunner of The Seattle Times used public records to construct the most complete roster to date of the investors of Seattle’s basketball team, the Sonics. “Some were announced when they bought the team in 2001; others were identified in public records or interviews. Several were recently confirmed by the team for the first time…

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Force used for minor offenses in boot camp

By hdcoadmin | April 14, 2006

Carol Marbin Miller of The Miami Herald used juvenile justice records and found that force was used against teenage boys in spite of nonviolent behavior at a Florida sheriff’s boot camp. “In only eight of the 180 instances documented since January 2003 were the teenagers described as hitting guards, fighting with other youths, threatening to…

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Clerk reports erroneous juror response rates

By hdcoadmin | April 5, 2006

Carl Jones of the Daily Business Review in South Florida analyzed Miami-Dade County juror response rates and found the county actually had about a 25 percent response in 2004-05 — rather than 54 percent as reported by the Office of the State Courts Administrator. And its true average monthly percentage for the last six months…

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Agency’s spy satellite technology loses relevance

By hdcoadmin | April 5, 2006

Michael Fabey of the DefenseNews looks into the U.S. National Reconnaissance Office’s fading imaging- and signals-intelligence program that reportedly has an annual budget of about $7 billion. “A satellite communications technology called spot beaming might help the NRO regain some of its fading signals-intelligence relevance, but imagery’s place as an intel centerpiece may have gone…

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Voters duped into GOP registration

By hdcoadmin | April 5, 2006

Tony Saavedra, Kimberly Kindy and Brian Joseph of The Orange County Register used voter records to show that more than 100 Orange County residents who thought they were simply signing petitions to cure breast cancer, punish child molesters or build schools were duped into registering as Republicans. The petition circulators were paid as much as…

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Drug companies sponsored FDA staff travel

By hdcoadmin | April 5, 2006

Alexander Cohen of The Center for Public Integrity analyzed FDA reports of privately sponsored trips taken by agency officials between October 1999 and September 2005 that cost more than $250 and found a loophole in the agency rules that has allowed its employees to receive more than $1.3 million in sponsored travel from groups closely…

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N.C. drinking water safety in doubt

By hdcoadmin | March 31, 2006

In a three-part series, Pat Stith of The (Raleigh, N.C.) News & Observer shows the “state’s regulation of drinking water reveals disregard for safety of private wells, weak regulation of public water systems and widespread problems with lead testing.” The series includes an interactive map and a sidebar about how the state closely followed Stith’s…

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Builders, nonprofit have close ties

By hdcoadmin | March 29, 2006

Reese Dunklin of The Dallas Morning News reports that “The low-income housing builders at the heart of the FBI’s corruption investigation at City Hall created a nonprofit organization, stocked it with friends and political allies and used it to obtain more than $3 million in tax-free subsidies that earned their companies millions more in profit.”…

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High salaries, free spending at N.Y. agency

By hdcoadmin | March 29, 2006

Michelle Breidenbach of The (Syracuse, N.Y.) Post-Standard looks into the “high salaries and free spending of the public’s money at the New York Power Authority,” the state’s publicly owned power generator. “NYPA’s six trustees oversee a $2.2 billion budget that accommodates the patronage and pork-barrel spending that come with a state public authority as well…

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